Ndamukong Suh is the latest example of how huge contracts in the NFL are mostly a sham

Ndamukong Suh is expected to be released by the Miami Dolphins this week with three years remaining on his $114 million contract.

The move is being made even though Suh is still one of the best defensive linemen in the NFL.

There was no chance Suh would have ever seen the end of his contract based on how it was structured.

In the end, Suh received $60 million in three seasons.

Ndamukong Suh is expected to be cut this week by the Miami Dolphins, according to several reports, and it is just the latest example of how, unlike other sports, huge contracts in the NFL are mostly a sham.

Both reports cited the Dolphins' desire to shake up their locker toom. Darlington called the move a "culture change." Rapoport said the move was about "regaining the locker room," and bringing in "the kind of players Dolphins coach Adam Gase wants."

The big issue was how much Suh counted against the salary cap each season.

Here is what Suh's salary cap figures looked like when he first signed the deal:

2015 — $6.1 million

2016 — $28.6 million

2017 — $15.1 million

2018 — $22.1 million

2019 — $24.1 million

2020 — $18.4 million

To put those numbers in perspective, over the last three seasons, Joe Flacco had the highest salary cap figure in the NFL at $24.6 million and no defensive player had a figure higher than $22.1 million.

In other words, right off the bat, that $28.6 million salary cap figure in 2016 was never going to happen.

Sure enough, the Dolphins did restructure the contract after the first season, giving Suh a $20 million bonus. That lowered his cap hit in 2016, but raised the number in each of the four remaining seasons.

Here is what his cap figures looked like after the restructuring:

2015 — $6.1 million

2016 — $12.6 million

2017 — $19.1 million

2018 — $26.1 million

2019 — $28.1 million

2020 — $22.4 million

Suh's $26.1 million cap hit for the 2018 season would have been the third largest in the NFL and one of only two among the top 14 that went to a non-quarterback.

At this point, the Dolphins basically had two options: 1) restructure the contract again, with another big bonus up front and likely having to add two years to the deal to spread out the cap hits (Suh would have been 33 in the final year of the contract); or 2) release Suh.

With none of the remaining years on Suh's contract guaranteed — standard operating procedure in the NFL — the decision was probably an easy one, despite still being one of the best players in the NFL.

In the end, Suh received $60 million for his three seasons of work in Miami. Nobody is going to feel sorry for Suh, but that is still a far cry from the $114 million that was announced in 2015.